Monthly Archives: September 2009

Good Facial Expressions

11 September 2009

Two eyes positioned above a pair of nostrils that are themselves perched above a mouth such is the layout of the face for vertebrate creatures ranging from sharks to humans. However well that arrangement may be optimized for finding and eating food, among mammals the face has taken on another critical role: communication. Nowhere is this function more apparent than in the human visage. Primates in general have complex social lives, and they commonly use facial expressions in their interactions with one another. We humans have particularly expressive faces with which we convey such emotions as fear, happiness, sadness and anger.

Researchers once chalked up the rich repertoire of human expressions to our having uniquely specialized facial muscles. But physical anthropologist Anne Burrows of Duquesne University has found that, in fact, the chimpanzee the next most dramatic primate differs little from humans in the musculature of its mug. Two features, though, do separate human facial expressions from those of the rest of the primate pack. First, we have distinctive sclerae, or whites, around our irises. Second, our lips protrude from our faces and are darker than the surrounding skin. These traits provide our countenances with strong visual contrasts that may well better telegraph our feelings.